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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 24 December 2024

Millennials terrified by the full stop

Linguistic experts have, rightly, claimed that the punctuation mark is viewed as a 'sign of annoyance'

Radhika Sanghani London Published 27.08.20, 06:17 AM
To use of a full stop is nothing short of intimidating for the millenials

To use of a full stop is nothing short of intimidating for the millenials Shutterstock

The sight of it makes every millennial’s blood run cold. With its blank finality, lack of warmth, and overtones of passive aggression, there is no punctuation more terrifying than the full stop.

Compared to the allure of ellipsis or an enthusiastic exclamation mark (so beloved by we millennials that I have one tattooed on my wrist), the use of a full stop — be it at the end of an email, WhatsApp, or even this very sentence — is nothing short of intimidating.

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Now it’s official. This week linguistic experts have, rightly, claimed that the punctuation mark is viewed as a “sign of annoyance” by younger generations.

To us it’s shorthand for “I’m so annoyed with you I’m going to send you this cold symbol of dread”; to anyone over 50 it’s the only grammatically correct way to end a sentence. Alas, this is just one of many irritating intergenerational divides...

Leaving voicemails

Voicemails used to serve a purpose. Like in the Eighties when people had landlines and would arrive home to messages on their answering machines, and the funniest prank they could conjure up was to record themselves saying “Hello? Hello? Can you hear me?” before the beep.

But now, in a world of WhatsApp?

It’s baffling. Yet baby boomers insist on waiting for unanswered calls to ring out (how they don’t give up after the first two rings is beyond us), only to then wait even longer for the automated voice explaining how to leave a voicemail, before eventually recording an overly formal message that no one will ever hear.

Ringing the doorbell

Doorbells are the new landlines: they’re becoming so obsolete that the only people who use them are cold callers — or your mother. Because in 2020, there is really no need. Apps tell us when our Deliveroo is on the doorstep, or a package has arrived. When our friends are outside, we know because they’ve already texted us saying “here!” — so we can open the door at the moment of their arrival, making life as easy as possible.

But this modern etiquette seems to have bypassed boomers who eschew the common decency of a simple one-word message in favour of pressing a shrill doorbell — something so terrifying to millennials that there are actual studies showing this one little button can cause us fear and anxiety.

Watching live TV

Boomers are not the only ones who got through lockdown with Normal People and The Nest. But unlike them, we millennials don’t know that the next episode is on BBC One at 9pm this Sunday. We don’t care. We probably don’t even have a television set.

Why would we bother watching programmes live when we can just view them in our own time on a streaming service, which you can pause to go to the loo and binge watch — rather than arranging your social life around the listings in the Radio Times?

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